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the insistence of those in power, but also because it confirms the interviewee’s assertions about the fact that with these efforts, “the symbol of a nation, its social voice, is being recovered.” CubaRaw and the El Círculo gallery are now an important part of this movement. We could not neglect the poetry, voice, styles, and musical productions emerging from Cuban Hip Hop. It is very Cuban, particularly since the nineties, when the poorest young people in Cuban society, among whom were an enormous number of Afro-descendants, came on the scene, against all odds, with a cultural movement whose dimensions offers incalculable possibilities for channeling aesthetic, social, and political projections and, above all, for expressing concerns, frustrations, needs and desires. The articles by David D Omni, “Cuban Hip Hop and Race,” and “Cuban Hip Hop: The Critical Voice and Critical of a Shaken Society,” by Leonardo Calvo, discuss this phenomenon.This forward-thinking cultural movement has another great exponent: painting, a form of artistic expression that has witnessed the emergence of young creators who through their symbolic production have also contributed “a space for confrontation that offers its own creative answers to Cuba’s social reality through their treatment of new problems. This has been in open defiance of habitual censorship, according to José Clemente Gascón, in “From Scandalous Sincerity to a Metaphor of Cynicism.”As Argentina has not been absent from the concert of Latin American countries in whose processes of formation and development Africans and their descendants participated actively, the article “Afro-Argentine Music: Notes for a Social History of Silence,” by Norberto Pablo Cirio, successfully demonstrates the falseho